Thursday, August 31, 2023

August Twenty-Twenty-Three

As we bid summer adieu, I offer you all this lovely back to school prayer from Sarah Bessey:

“Beloved one, as you begin anew, may the light of curiosity and truth of love guide you on this journey back to school. May you find the courage and humility to be both student and teacher, knowing that we all hold wisdom to share.

May your hearts remain open to the stories woven into the pages of textbooks and the lives of your fellow travelers. Let the diversity of thought and experience expand your horizons and deepen your love for the world.

In the stress of deadlines and assignments, remember that your worth is not measured by grades alone. Embrace the process, the questions that lead to even more questions. May you experience moments of challenge and grace, laughter and learning as gifts.

As you gather with friends old and new, may you build connections that bring goodness to you and the community around you. Be gentle with yourselves, for learning is not just about acquiring facts but about allowing transformation and growth, too.

So, go forth with the grace of a learner's heart. May you approach each day with a spirit of wonder, ready to engage, explore, and evolve.

And as you venture into this new season of learning, may you always remember: you are enough and you are so very, very loved.

Amen

Now go get’em…”


soaking up the last days of summer...











good to the last drop.... 💙

Wednesday, August 30, 2023

Birthday Cheer

Happy Birthday to our wonderful Hannah today! 
(birthday eve dinner at her house last night) 




Tuesday, August 29, 2023

Whidbey Magic

I got to be on Camp Casey for the past few days for another theology class, and it was such a gift to be in that place with such wonderful people.... (and not too bad to be in my happy place on a long run during our afternoon break on Monday from Camp Casey over to the loop at Ebey's Landing and then back to Camp Casey on the beach) 



perfect running weather with a cool sea breeze blowing off the coast 
and with gorgeous blues and grays and greens for as far as the eye could see.... 




Sunday, August 27, 2023

Church on the Lake

For the 4th Sunday at Union Church, there are service opportunities for Sunday mornings, and I love this rhythm as it's a reminder that all of life is worship (not just the singing and gathering on Sunday mornings).  Today there was a group who gathered to collect trash on Lake Union in kayaks, and I was definitely up for this opportunity!

 What a great group of people to start the day with! 



Emily, Lynden, Alyson, Mike, Garrison, and Dee 


Prepare our bodies for the labors of this day. Give us strength and health to complete them.

Prepare our minds for the demands of this day. Grant us clarity, creativity, and discernment.

Prepare our souls for those sorrows and joys and celebrations and disappointments we will encounter, that every circumstance would serve only to draw us nearer to you.

May our words, our choices, and our actions today be offered as true expressions of worship.

Now you who are loved of God, step forward into this new day appointed by him, that you might journey through its hours in the peace and grace and the love of your Lord.

Lead us this day, Lord Christ that we might walk its paths in the light of the hope of our coming redemption.

Amen

(Morning Prayer from Every Moment Holy) 


Saturday, August 26, 2023

Chocolate Croissants

Back in April (on April 23rd to be exact, Taylor and I had planned to make chocolate croissants from scratch because we love the ones you can get at Trader Joe's so much and wanted to try to make them ourselves), but it turned out that he had gone to Chipotle the night before and got food poisoning, so baking was the very last thing he wanted to do. So, we finally, made them and baked them up on August 23rd just in time for Anna to have one before she left to go back to college that morning.  Surprisingly, it was not a ton of work, and they were DELICIOUS! We are checking things off our list and trying to soak this time up... 








Friday, August 25, 2023

Neither of us is standing still

this is one of my favorite pictures from the summer above....
and I loved this article below about the Barbie movie and am so grateful for our girl and
 for all the ways we are growing individually and together.... 
-------------------------------------

No, Moms Don’t Have to ‘Stand Still’ for Their Children to Succeed

by Karen Spierling | August 9, 2023 

Our first child is leaving for college at the end of August, which means we are smack in the middle of a summer of “lasts” and attempting to squeeze in every possible drop of togetherness without all killing each other. It’s a bumpy ride. But we aren’t giving up. This is why my eldest, her younger sister, and I went to see Barbie together on the afternoon it came out. 

Moms don’t stay frozen in time while their teens become adults; they grow, too.

I loved the movie despite the mental and emotional distraction of bracing for a significant life transition. I loved how it lived up to all that its marketing promised. I loved Barbie’s shock at encountering the real world. I loved America Ferrara’s monologue.

I love a lot of things about the Barbie movie

I loved seeing it with my almost grown-up teenage daughters. I loved adding another common experience to our relationships, even as those opportunities are about to become less frequent. But then, almost at the end, there was something I didn’t love.

We mothers stand still so that our daughters can look back and see how far they’ve come.

RUTH HANDLER (AS PLAYED BY RHEA PERLMAN) IN BARBIE

 

This was the line that Ruth Handler, the creator of Barbie, played by Rhea Perlman, speaks to Barbie as she grapples with her future. It is the line that has people weeping on TikTok. 

One columnist called it the movie’s “most profound line.” But as I sat in the theater, it took my willpower not to groan aloud or embarrass my daughters with a verbal eye roll.

“Are you kidding me?” I was thinking. “After a whole movie about a mother leading the fight to save what is good about Barbie Land, the lesson of the movie is that mothers have to stand still?” 

I am open to the possibility that this line would have hit me differently at a different phase of life. But at this particular moment, when eighteen years of love, sweat, and tears have brought us to the verge of a new phase of family life, all I could think about was how often that very idea — that we are supposed to stand still for our children to succeed — shapes mothers’ feelings about sending their children out into the world.

The strange expectation that moms stay stagnant while their kids go off into the world is not reality

They go, we stay. They learn new things, and we think about the paths we didn’t pursue. They build their futures; we are what those futures lead away from. Ultimately, they don’t need us anymore, and we are stuck forever in the same place we’ve always been.

No wonder many parents wander around this summer before college with dazed expressions and teary eyes. But this strange expectation of motherhood does not reflect reality — even when an unnecessarily shmaltzy movie line makes us think it does. 

And it is not a fair burden to place on our daughters as they step out of our homes and into their new college worlds. Their existence has not frozen us in time. And their future success does not depend on us standing still and becoming touchstones for them.

What I wanted to scream at the movie screen, in that darkened (but not dark enough to conceal my identity as my daughters’ mother) theater, was: NO. I am not standing still. We are not standing still!

Thanks to my daughter, I have been doing the opposite of standing still

I have been in constant motion for my first eighteen years as a mother. I have been learning new things. I have been developing expertise as a parent. I have been changing my thoughts about the world and moving along new paths. I have been flying by the seat of my pants. I have often been getting by on minimal sleep. But I have not been standing still. And this is thanks to my daughters.

Without them, my husband and I might have built different career paths. We might have ended up moving more often. We certainly would have made different choices about spending our money and time.

But we grew with our daughters in ways we didn’t even know to expect before we had children. Everything about how I view the world is shaped by raising, living with, and getting to know my daughters.

The ways I interact with students and colleagues as a college professor have been enriched by what I have learned as a mother. The things that bring me joy have multiplied in unforeseen ways as I’ve raised my children. 

Parenting set me into constant motion, learning and doing all kinds of new things

And my confidence in my abilities to navigate the challenges of life has grown as well, with every phone call with our pediatrician’s office, piece of friend group drama, or decision to let go just a little bit more in the interest of raising daughters prepared to face life as adults. 

As much as I hated that line, it reminded me — perhaps by accident — that gratitude is a two-way street in family life. I hope that as my daughter finds her way in her first year of college, she will look around (not back) and appreciate all that we have poured into our parenting efforts.

But I also want her to know how grateful I am for the opportunities that her existence has given me to grow with her. As we move her into her dorm, I want to thank her for everything she has taught me. And for all I know, I will learn from her journey through college and into full adulthood.

I imagine plenty of mothers will be sitting in theaters this summer with their recent high school graduates, watching Barbie and holding back tears (or letting them flow).

I want to suggest a different line as inspiration

For all of those parents smiling bravely as they try to find the balance between holding their
soon-to-be-college students close and helping them prepare to step into their future, I want to suggest a different Barbie line as inspiration for the big transition we are all facing.

When Barbie first tries to sort through her shock on arriving in L.A., she sits at a bus
stop where an older woman waits for a bus. Since no one ages in Barbieland, Barbie has never seen an old woman. Rather than being repulsed, Barbie looks at her in wonder and says, “You are so beautiful.” The woman smiles back at Barbie and says, “I know.” While this line hasn’t grabbed the headlines, director Greta Gerwig fought to keep
that scene and considers it “the heart of the movie.”

AD

Learning about Gerwig restored my faith in the movie — and my conviction that there must be a strange backstory to how Rhea Perlman’s line ended up in the story.

The true beauty of a mother-daughter relationship is that we are both still moving forward

As my daughter leaves for college, I want to send her off with that confidence — the knowledge that she is beautiful in every aspect of her being and doesn’t need a stranger on a park bench to confirm it for her.

And most importantly, I want her to understand that the true beauty of a mother-daughter relationship can be that, even when our paths begin to diverge, we are both still moving in ways that keep us both intertwined and growing.

Neither of us is standing still.

https://grownandflown.com/moms-dont-have-to-stand-still-for-children-succeed/

Thursday, August 24, 2023

So Much Life Together

Last night, I showed this slideshow that I made for Taylor (since it was Anna's last night with us) and needless to say, there was not a dry eye in the house.... SO GRATEFUL FOR SO MUCH LIFE TOGETHER! 



Wednesday, August 23, 2023

Labyrinth Walk

 

I've found labyrinths to be so helpful to ground me during unsettled times when my foundations seem to shift, so I took Anna and Taylor tonight before dinner for to walk the one at St. Mark's as so much change is on the horizon for all of us. It was a sweet marker on this last night together before Anna leaves tomorrow to head back to Scripps. 







placemats set out for our dinner tonight... 
(year one and year eighteen for Anna and Taylor) 



Tuesday, August 22, 2023

Good to the Last Drop!

We are making the most of the last few days with Anna and squeezed in a family hike to Mount Dickerman today... Another stunning place in our backyard here in the NW.... 💙